Apple, Samsung Displace Nokia In Mobile Web Use

For the first time, more people accessed the mobile Internet from Apple and Samsung devices than from Nokia devices, says StatCounter.

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In yet another sign of Nokia's long decline, it is no longer the most popular mobile vendor in terms of Internet use. New research from StatCounter says that Nokia ceded the top spot between January 2012 and January 2013 to rivals Apple and Samsung.

Nokia has long been the world's top vendor when it comes to mobile Web use, but the precipitous decline in popularity of its Symbian platform and slow build of its Windows Phone business have toppled it, though just barely.

According to StatCounter's numbers, Nokia dropped from 37.67% in January 2012 to 22.15%. That's a decline of 15.52 percentage points. During the same time, Apple also saw its share decline, from 28.67% in January 2012 to 25.86% in the same month this year.

"It's good and bad news for Apple," commented Aodhan Cullen, CEO of StatCounter, in a statement. "Apple has been handed the number one spot despite its falling usage share. A decline in Nokia usage from January 2012 to January 2013 means the Finnish company ceded the top spot to Apple."

StatCounter didn't provide any projections on how mobile Web use from these three hardware providers will shape up for 2013, but the trends are fairly clear. Nokia is on its way down, as is Apple to a lesser extent, while Samsung is on its way up. It would not be surprising for Samsung to steal the top spot from Apple before the year is out. iPhone 5 and iPad Mini notwithstanding, Samsung's continuing onslaught of Galaxy-branded Android smartphones have taken the world by storm.

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